HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1924-8-28, Page 7When The Sables
4tirre tuttlrig Their Teeth
The. Mother Should Use
When the baby starts lo cut its teeth,
-then is the time that the pool: mother is
under the steess of groat anxiety. The
ahild's bowels become loose and diarr-
hoea, dysentery, sIic, cramps and many
‘other bowee complaints manifest them-
-selves; the gums become swollen; can-
, kers form in the mouth, and. in many
'eeases the child esaetee away to a shadow
and eventually death ensues. • On the
first sign of anY bowel trouble is the
.time that the mother shaeld ese "Dr.
Fowler 'e,' and,perhaps save the
',baby 's life.
Mrs. F. le. Burger, Jr, PetaSvaiva,
•Ont writes: -"My baby boy Was very
• sick with diarrhoea and cramps in his
stomach when he was cutting his teeth.
I, tied eeveral remedies,;. eut without
any results uetil nty:
:me to uee Dr. Feeder's Extract of Wild..
• Stro.wbeerv. I just gave Um. fe*
doses, and. in a coulee .of days he was
NOTES ON EXPORT CATTLE
SHIPMENTS.
During the past !three sr,ears Atm
Deminion EXperimental• Farms, have
been making experimental shipments
of store and fat cattle and chilled beef
to Great Britain. "
In g .shipment enede in M 1924
consisting of 140 head oe slote cattle
of different ages and weights, from
the .Experimental Stations 'at Leth-
bridge, Alta, eecitte and Rosthern,
Sask., and Lennoxville, Que., some in-,
terestieg facts.a.ee shown. •
. Total c.ost pf shipment to Mancheet-
en, per steer:
' From Lethbridge . $42.60
From Scott .. ......... 39,96
From Roethern 42.13 '
From Lennoxville 28.95
Shrinkage in rail and oceao ship-
ment:
Fat or shoet keep (average 1,309
lbs.) from Lethbridge, Alta., shrunk
7.5 per cent. ,
Steers not so well finished (average
1,255 lbs.) from the same Fenn, „lost
at the rate of 6.8 per cent.
Cattle from Scott, Sask., shrunk 8.1
per cent.; in the case of :Yearlings
•
(average 990 lbs.), and,with tevo-year-
olds (average 1.268 lbs:), 8.8 per cont.
• Whale 1,148 lb. Angus feeders feorn
Rostheen lost 7.7er Ce t d 1 322
P e an ,
Ib. butcher steers shrunk 9.0 per' -cent.
•__ • _
as well as lie could lee. peetreezoNs.
- I wish to thank you...very neuelt.for
your useful remedy. ,I will never be
without it ea my home.'' •
Main Causes of Calf Troubles.
Cold milk to -day -warm milk to-
morrow.
Sour milk to -day -sweet milk to-
morrow.
Sour, dirty feed pails and troughs.
Dirty pens, flies, no protection from
heat or sine, •
Feeding .too artech or too little.
No drinking water supply.
Sour whey and sour skim milk from
the factory.
erermin.
It is a good practice to leave the
calf with its dam for the first two or
three days, even though it is -planned
to Tear the calf by hand.
Autumn -born calves usually escape
digestion troubles, due to cold weather
being an aid in preventing the sour-
ing of food, .
A grass lot adjoining the stable is
ye* Useful td' calves oeeer three
• months of -age.. . Young calves ethriVe
best in a clean, well ventileted, cool,
dry stable. e
If the horns are not desired, treat
with caustic potash before the calf is
more than ten days old.
Pen Fed Steers.
Cattle feeders who experience labor
•difficulties during the winter season
might find it proiltable to try housing
• „steers in loose pens instead of trying
• them in stalls as is usually done. Ex-
periments carried on al I,ennoxville
Que., during five years, went to show
-that steers wintered in pens made
eheaper gains than those tied in stales.
TWee lots of telt steers each were used
the experiment, one lot housed in a
'10 -large pen and the other tide in stalls.
The steers were of uniform quality
and size. For two weeks after being
brought in from the paiture they
were fed on ha Y and ensilage. • The
grain ration was then commenced;
consisting of wheat screenings and
bran for the early part of the winter,
and Of corn meal,seeeenings, bran,
and oil meal during the finishingeper•-
•iod, when each was receiving about 8
pounds daily. Me. McCleary, the Sup-
erintendent of the Experimental Ste-
' tion who conducted this experiment
reports that there was consider bl
saying in. labor: arid. housing charges.
•
shipping from the West had much to
1. It was apparent that care in rail
do with minimizing 'shrink. , -Over-
crowding is responsible for heavy -loss
and tattle arrive at port of loading in
a more or less exhausted, shrunken
, condition. Several hours rest is ad-
visable at feeding points where the
exercise and opportunity to relax is
possibly 'more important than the
2. Fat cattle fose more than those
in a less forward condition.
3. Ocean shrinkage is coinparative-
ly light (under fair conditions as to
weather and attendance).
WHICH PAYS BETTER -SALE IN CANADA
OR EXPORT?
,It is frequently stated that it pays
just as well to sell in Canada as to
export. In a general way this is true.
It should be remembered distinctly,
however, that for the classes of cattle
required by Great "Britain, the export,
trade has established or stabilized
Canadian prices. In other words the
British market has Pulled up Can-
eadian prices to the same -level, costs
• of shipping considered. This has been
epeoven in two shipments made by the
Dominion Experimental Fames during
this season. In a -lot. sent frern Mari-
time Fa.rms local prices were increas-
ed through the fact that steers were
exported from the locality. In ship-
ments froen Saskatchewan and Al-
berta maximum. appraised values at
pbint of shipment, were, with the ex -
year -old steer that has been wintered
economically on home grown feeds and
with cheap housing•, ancl that is ship-
ped off grass in the .eall, is a good
proposition for both buyer and seller.
Foe the former he grows and fattens,
for the latter he represents a sale oe
a strictly home produced article
3. The lighter speing shipped feed
er steer may gb forward from Febru-
aey to April, to finish off grass as fat in
August and September. During .Apeil,
May and June the "short keeps" gee
cattle forward in condition will find a
market provided they will develop not
enere-ehan an -800-pound carcass When
subject to a "short keep" following
period. It must be remembered that
the .„ehort keep, fat, or choice butcher
steer, when • exported, erepresents a
heavier investment (greater feed cost)
to the shipper and is frequently a risk-
ier propoeition. Shipping the feeder
steer. that has been developed largely
on grass and home grown roughage
with little concentrates, involves mini-
mum risk on the part of the shipper
and allows the British feeder to do
tlee gambling.
• 4. The time of shipment, therefore,
has znuch to do with the weiglit and
ege ofesteer to ship., The young light-
weight steer, if well selecled, is very
popular, as indicated by this experi-
ment. Unless prices are marleedly ad,
vanced for the 900 -pound steer, how-
ever, the econonly of shipping him is
doubtful. -Speaking generally, the
btftcher or retail type of steer com-
mands the highest price when fat. The
British dealers like the „barley weight
butcher steer, just as, In Canada.
Shippers would do well, therefore, in
selecting steers that would land in
England weighing not greatly in ex-
cess of 1,250 pounds.
5. Horned cattleoare at a distinct
disadvantage. .
6. Branding an the ribs is decidedly
objectionable.
• 7. Finally, it may once more be
poihted out that Great Britain need
•not be considered as a profitable out-
let for the common butcher steer, of
-which there is too great a perdentage
on our markets. Breeding herds of
beef cattle in Canada cannot be allow-
ed to deteriorate, if we are to cater
to and make a name for ourselves on
the British market.
Further particulars regarding these
shipments may be obtained from the
Central Experimental Farm Ottawa.
7
Fertilizing for Potatoes.
Two experiments out of three, that
are to be conducted with complete fer-
tilizers for the potato crop at Nappan,
Experiznental Perm have shown:
First -That •commercial -fertilizer
has a distinct value in 'potato pro -chic -
ton. The average yield from all,plpts
eceiving epplicatien of fertilizer
was 247.6 bushels, while the 'average
of all unfertIlized check plots was
1.07.5 bushels. -
ception of one lot 'of yearlings, in- Second -That so far as the author -
creased by from 2 to 52 cents per
cwt. Quebec cattle of rather indiffer-
ent quality on export exactly equalled
prices received at the Farm for cattle
of like quality. If the price of cattle
in Canada is •equal to net export
prices', this benefit is directly due to
the removal of the embargo.
BRIEF DEDUCTIONS FROM THIS EX-
F'ERIMENT.
1. Uniformity of groups is a most
important factor in successful sale.
The man who can breed or buy for
export steers of uniform coloe gets
the proverbial benefit of the buyers'
:first impressions. Thelow set, blocky
type of steer gets the feeder's eye.
2. The British feeder likes' best a
bullock that is young enough and •
spare, enough to grow and fatten at s
the same time. The yearling or two-
ities at the Farm can judge from two
years' • results, a 3-8-6 Mixeure or
4-8,10 or 4-8-8 mixeure under „aver-
age conditions will give good result's.
Third -That under average condi-
tions the most ,econornical qUantity to,
use is from 1,000 to 1,200 pounds per
This experiment is being continued
this year. Another, which is in its
second year, is .with basic slag. •The
Superintendent, Mr. W. W. Baird, in
his report for 1923, states that the
average Yield of green frem all of the
slaw plots was 55.48 bushels against'
52.56 busi-els frorn the check ploee.
More definite results are expected in
the second and third
Where the clouds left, showing -bine
ley after a long storm, there the wind
vill be on the naorrow._
Who say !S apples? The doctors will be out of a job if the apple -eating
habit takes hold ,of every gang of. girls like jt did this one,
AUGU sT 31.
Jesus Talks With a Samvitan 'Woman, John 4: 4-42, Gold-
en Text -God is a Spirit: and they that worship him
must worship in spirit and truth. --131m 4: 24.
1. LIVING. 'AWNAATLLS,
IL SPIRITUAL WORSHIP, 15-26.
111. THE HARVEST or THE WORLD,
Teereonimriore-NOt only did Christ
31-35.
insist on the necessity of a new lite
for the Jews, as we saw in the case of
Nicoclernus, but he offered the same
new life to others Outside of the jew-
ieh fold. He proelaimed the doctrine
of one access to God for the Jew and
for Samaritan. This is the, theme of
the •conversation with the Samaritan
woman, which took olace at the an-
cient well of Jacob, near the town of
Sychar. •it was near this spot, on the
slopes of Mount Ebel and Mount Geri-
zim, that the worship of Jehovah was
first proclaimed in Palestine at the
entrance of Israel into the land. And
therefore it is fitting ,tleat here Jesus
should proclaim ,the dawn of the
Christian era, in which God is to be
worshipped, not`by Jews only at Jeru-
salem, and not by Samaritans only on
Mount Gerizim, but by all men every-
where "in spirit and in truth." The
interest of the present lesson_ is in-
tensely missionary. "'Jesus sees in the
redemption of this woman of Samaria,
- BY.BONAI3ETH G.BRICKELL.
the romis of th iregath ei of
When I was a bride, with mor
a fluence, and if carefully guided, this
d influence is g . • If "sonny"
the
heathen
character, Contrast the good
man with the bad woman. He came
by night, she by day. She confessed
Christ at once. He was a secret dis-
ciple for years. She brought a whole
city th Christ. He brought -well, who
knows whom he did bring? • In oech
case Jesus led the conversation, with
thee and understanding, from an
everyday theme of individual interest,
to a personal discussionof divine re-
lationships and eternol issues, The
external differences be ween the two
types are very wide, Jesus reveals
Ithe truth that there is no essential dif-
ference in heart hunger and spiritual
need. And he Meets the need, by a
natural chat about the things upper-
most in their minds.' He that winnetli
' souls is wise. He has need to be:
'wise in discerning unnoticed possibil-
, ities o good, wise in finding contact
, points with even indifferent or hostile
people, and wise above all else in the
o melon and practiceof the truth
' that religion needs to be let out ame.
ong the people. It is decadent in the
! dim cloister, but warm and vital in
the intimate and active relationships
. of home and street, farm and factory,
shop and market and' train and bunk-
house and mind. But let the Christian
deliberately dorninath the conversation,
leading it to those things every human
soul yearns for and needs th know.
r e rWidening
g etnhde fountain, each
oCfirae/e. There is an
drop of which starts' a similar foun-
tain. • Carrying a. drop of this, the
wayfarer could safely cross any bar-
ren plain. No matter how wide or
dry the dessert, he -had with him the
secret of unfailing springs. Where a
drop fell there gushes a new fountain.
The woman in the story "left her
waterpot." Would that every mission-
ary interview were similarly effective.
She hastened to share with her peo-
ple, not the water of Jacob's well for
their bodies, but the water of life foe
their thirsty soufs. A revival, follow-
ed, and the disciples were challenged
to lift their eyes to see from the seed
sowing of Jesus, in unpromising soil,
eethe harvests of the future grow."
Talk about the romance of missions.
Can any fiction equal this tale of a
dull -minded alien woman, without
reputation or social standing, through
whom "many of the Samarita.ns of
that city believed on him." This was
has gone out to all the earth.
the first foreign mission, and its line
•
e family coreveeszetlon has a great in-iih.eaLeIPhweN,iGw,weeeAlTtR, 7-14.
When ! .ng. e
1
dreams and hopes than could befall'
person outside 'of a fairy tale, I rea
a perfectly written, soulless article
which told how farm women coul
make rural houses into homes. It deal
carefully with eery modern conven
ience that was known to lighten wo
men's labors.
The years have come and gone, and
I have added as many of these conven-
iences as we have had profitable years
-about two out of eight, I believe. But
have I given up my idea of a "homey"
home because I do not have all the
things that writer would have me be-
lieve absolutely necessary? Indeed,
no! I will try 'all the harder, in spite
of the handicaps. I am helping to
establish a real home, and I have de-
cided that a house can be a home,
though it lack many things, if there is
an everepresent; home -making spirit
Edgar Guest, in a recent article says
that "It takes a heap o'living to make
a house a home." Yes, if it is the
right.kind of living. It need not be
all.joyfulobut there Must be the spirit
of -love, patience and sympathy.
• A REAL P'ARTNERSHIP.
The woman on --the farm has a
chance to lead in the most wondeeful
family companicnship there is.' By the
very nature -ofe-theefarininge-business.
a wife must be.a real 'peitieel, if the
enterprise is to succeed. eller interest
is usually more vital than is shown in
a husband's business in a city office
building. many blocks away. With
their mother and father "'acting as
partners, the children catch the spirit,
and the family is co-operating, not
because of any teaching, but because,
of their very nature.
Co-operation also applies to play,
and here again, parents must be wise
and patient. If you plan to enrich
home life by enjoying leisure times to-
gether, allow the children' to share in
deciding what is enjoyable. The
changing years bring a change in
_taste. ee
THINGS THE CHILDREN LIKE.
Recently, at a small resort nearby,
our children found nothing so inter-
esting as the efforts of some boys and
girls, with inflated inner tubes,. about
their chests, trying to learn to swine.
The performance. did not appeal to
grown folks, but I realized that twenty
yea.rseago I would have found it quite
an attraction, so we watched them,
for a long time. .
Our talking -machine has helped to
e
Vs. 7-9. The Samaritan woman ex -
has dug a great, big well (about
presses surprise that Jesus, a Jew,
twelve inches deep) or sister has made -
. should ask a cup of water from one of
raecheaitveforcahreerfudlollyco' nithrneierndwaotii•okns. hOuIldf
the Law of Moses, they observed the
a hated race. The Samaritans had
mother has attended a club meeting Sabbath, and other ordinances, and
theirf '!
different from the Jewish, but they
p was o ye/yr
were schismatics, they retained some
pagan customs, and the Jews avoided'
all contact with them.
I
V. 10. The woman coraes to Jacob's
well perhaps for superstitious reasons.!
she should tell the family •the inter-
esting things that always happen.
When father goes alone to toeen, he
can tell whom he met and what he saw
while' there.
In the home that sends out the kind
of boys and girls the world needs, e as no true religion or experience
of God, for her life •has been wrong,1
business deals are discussed and plan-
n,ed, and there need be few secrets if and she has given up the hope of any!
children are taught that family mat-
ters are not to be discussed outside
the home.
Hospitality is an essential in home-
making, but it should not develop into
. a state of affairs, where mother does
the work and' the rest of the family
get the pleasure. All -the modern con-
.•
make many enjoyable evenings for us
all. The money which paid for, it1
might have been used towards install-
ing a 'water system, but we can help
-each other carry water, while I can
not sing "A Perfect Day" as does
Alma Gluck, nor can my husband play,
"Souvenir" as does Mischa Elrnan.'
Long cold winter evenings mean stay-'
ng at home for rural folks, and music
makes the evenings pleasanter. Evenl
n buying records, the children should
e considered, and if "Turkey in the!
Straw" delights them, there is no
arm in owning this rollicking record.
Many parents object to paying chil-'
reel for their services, contending!
that they should learn eo do their,
-t
hare, without being hired. But I am',
not so sure, for after all, we work for
pay, or we soon quit work, and pay is.
TRAINING OUR CHILDREN
While there is no substitute as good
as the egg, we should be grateful that
none of the substitirges are as bad as
some of the eggs. So say we all.
erie 'are. three good, points for
farniees to. remeenber in considering
horses and horse breeding
Start with the best blood and con-
- •
formation possible."
Keep horses straight in feet and
legs and free from disease. •
Provide plenty of water and good
food. ••
,
WHICH KIND OF SPOT S DO YOU PREFER?
BY MAUDE ',TEEM AN OSBORNE.
In reprimanding children, one His mother was sitting eight by the
should be very careful not to antagon-, spot of paint, and so Teddy jumped
•
ize them, otherwise the harm done! into it and tracked ft all over "the
may be greater than the offence which porch. 'She could have said "Yes, .
called forth the reprimand.• { that's lovely, dear, but now let's get b
Warren, •in his eagerness- to helpl Teddy out; for just see what he's do -
o o e y was a very, g, er, veiy soon perhaps,
warm-hearted little boy -had couldave said something to remind
paint on the floor of the new porch of Warren that he was not to let Teddy
their cabie in the woods. He had been on the porch.
Instead, what?
She took not the least notice of the
lovely little present, but scolded War-
ren voeiferously for letting Teddy in
Many Worn: en Are Troubled •
With Their Kidneys
commanded -yes, that is the right
word -to keep Teddy, the dog, off the
porch till. the paint could dry,
Now .it happened, just after this,
that some friends called to take War- In fact, she shouted at him. "Take
ren his. little sister and. their Mother
on a picnic. ‘Mother, however could
not go, as she was expecting company.
So the children went without her. • .
Warren wae fascinated with the lit-
tle paper fork e with which they ate
their lunch as. be had never seen any
before. He begged for one to take
home to Mother. Ile even saved his
piece of cake for her. Seeing this, his cake, the sandwiches and even the lit-
hostees gave him apiece of each kind tle paper' fo'ele oti the ground in front
of cake, end one of each variety of of Teddy. As he did so, his face was
sandwich. These he wrapped in paper
When women find their kidneys out
of ordere when their back a.ehes and
rens' ell they need to do es take a
ew e or her. Jesus is weary,
with his journey, she is still morel
weary of a life of sin, and Jesus,
knowing this, says, "If thou knewest,
the gift of God, and who it is that,
saith to thee, Give me to drink; thou'
wouldst have asked of him, and he'
would have given thee living water."
That is, refreshment,for the soul.
veniences in the evorldlcan leot make Vs' 1144' The woman has a sense
•should preach and practice the idea of nderstand for she does ncclest I
up for lack of genuine spirit. We' ioesse to u
f what is meant but she pretends
up
to speak of religion. She has
righf because it is right, instead of all these years avoided the subject,
because some one else ' thinks it is. and now she pretends not to know
Children should be obedient,' helpful,
and respectful, because it is their duty
to be so, and it will make them happier
than if they are indolent and teouble-
seine.
• An electric light system is splendid,
but the absence of .one need not be
whet "living water" means. But
ansveers that water from earthly
springs cannot satisfy the 'thirst ef
the soul. She herself is not happy,
or satisfied, or at peace with God. On
the -othei hand, Jesus, can give that
which will prove a • never -failing
spring of personal joy and 'peace. He
a calamity. If kerosene lamps are has God's gift of new life at his com-
used, keep them shining, light two or mand.
three instead of one. .
THP BATHTUB QUESTION. II. SPIRITUAL wonsme, 15-26.
, . .
Bathtubs have not been distributed
• woman that she is not happee ,He now
Vs 15-20 Jesus had indicated to the
throughout our country; but, where her life is not what it should be. The
draws from her the confession that
they are absent,- the good old galvan- revelation leads her to admit that he
ized wash -tub is used frequently and
thoroughly, and after all, personal
cleanliness is the point. A clean body
goes hand in hand with a clean mind
-and a porcelain bathtub is but one
means to an end.
As a leader in home life, the mother
should instil a respect for religion. No religion, the true worship of God, has
sincere
wanhdatayttoeunrd creed r oerhubreelhie.f,Thbee lirtetleintodidspoliwt?ith the questions which
problems of our lives, and a regard aritens. t is a matter of the heart's
between Jews and Sa-
doctrines of Christianity apply toecall 11?!
for them brings strength. el, sincerity before God. The hour hae
If, like myself, you hive a modern now come for all men, Jews and Sa-
nijoarruistaalnesmaloirke,G
teoriztihmih, kbenito tinooryeieoldf
home in your dreams only, remember their souls to the pure worship of God
that, successful motherhood (and- that
is usually the motive behind making "iii spirit and in truth." God seeks
"spiritual" worship, that is purity and
is a "prophet." But to escape from
further conversation on the subject of
personal religion, she drags ,in the
Jerusalem- Gerizim controversy. Jews,
she says, have their ideas of religion,
and Samaritans have theirs, and who
fee to decide which is right?
Vs. 21-24. Jesus' answer is that true
raise boys and girls who will love of the heart. True religion is in
g° out ere „u is "in ru' ," ecause it h
a house a home) is only striving to
Why Sheep Dipping Pays.
Fall dipping for ehep just 'as
important as spring dipping, leut ow-
ing to the fact that ticks are not as
easily -distinguishable latein the sea-
son as at the beginning the second
operation is often neglected. a
leaflet just issued by the Dominion
Live Stock Branch, of which Mr. A. A.
MacMillan, Chief of the _Sheep and
Swine Division, is the author, the fol-
lowing reasons are given as to why it
pays to dip:
1. Sheep tha.e are free from ticks
and lice grow more and better wool.
rap4.idly.
ruffle better, and lambs grow more
danitdionis. more easily kept in good eon_
2. A clean flock requires 'less feed
3. The lamb crop is stronger, ewes
Parasites are a source of serious
discomfort to sheep. The good shep-
herd is mindful of the comfort •of his
flock.
While the cost of dipping need not
texceed three cents per head, from
fifty cents to a dollar and a half may
easily be saved. September and Oe»
tober are the best months for fall dip-
ing. If the weather be cold, the flock
hould be housed for a day or two, to
give the fleece a chance to dry out.
Mr. MacMillan advises community
ipping where possible, as thereby
oth cost and labor are lessened. Alto
and make this old world a little bright- epirit," that is, it requires a surrend- d
depends on a right conception of G-od
er and better. While labor-saving de- the rathee. We must think what God
vices help a great deal, decide for is, and yield ourselves to him in sin -
yourself haw much depends upon love cere trust and surrender.
and companionship, which money can Vs. 25, 26. The woman makes a last
not buy, but which are free to every
home -lover and home -maker, if we effort to escape by saying that the
asp them. •
Messiah, when he comes, will make
Holmes has said: And where things plain, and that she can wait
ove is home, home that our feet meet, till then. Then Jesus -reveals that the
may lengthee-but it never parts.
1 -7, III. THE HARVEST, OF THE WORLD 31-35 '
Messiah is himself.
Vs. 31-34. The incident at the well
) .
leave but not our hearts. Th h 7 e
The c am
has profoundly stirred the soul of n
Jesus, and so absorbed is he in the h
the arrangement of annual or eerie',
annual dipping days, so that the freat-
ment of all flocks in the district may
be practically. assured.
The slop barrel -dirty, stinking and
fly attracting -is still found on too
many -farms, Not only is it an eye-
sore but it is unhealthy for ,the hogs.,
The slop, all of which is neer remov-
ed, sours and brews, especially in sum -
ler time, until it is'almost as bad a$
ootleg whiskey. It loses its food
alue and becomes unfit for consume). -
ion. Slop should be fed fresh coy not
you 'have 'put its parts ih order and thought of savieg this woman that
Ever' problem is a hard one until
When his disciples return he does not t
seem to notice Then as if to
inattention, he says, "I have food of
which you do not know anything."
How intense was Jesus' longing for
the redemption of the lost! It made
him forget food and every natural
want. But the disciples cannot enter
into his thought, foxethey do not real-
ize how near the redemption is. Then
jeVsu.s35sp. eaTklise spiritual harvesteof the
world is only waiting to be reaped.
, We must not think of it to
r distant.
Jesus draws attention o e Samar-
itans who are now seen crossing over
the field e on their way from the vil-
lage. 'They are coming to see him
and to speak with him, "Look," he
says to his disciples, "see .how the
fields are already white for harVest-
ing." But God needs workers.
APPLICATION.
• By the Wayside. An En -lisle -nail
has recently said that it is a depress-
ing sight to see a British congtegation
emerging from Sunday services on
their way to Sunday dinner, "They
ha,ve done with religion for the weele."
If this is true they need to study the
methods and habits of jesue. He was
always finding ways and means of
applying teligion to life. Last week
we studied his way with a man -a
Jew, a ruler and teacher of the people.
To -day eve have an interview with a
woman, a Samaritan, of dull mind and
begun to Work on the first 'of them.
HIS HEART WEAK
HIS NERVES BAD
Mr Elwi C II P rvill 0 t
usually money, which we exchange for weetes:-''My nerves it were in a very
`e'w hexes of • pleasures or necessities. If children, bad condition and the least little thing
•
work_regularly and more or less will- would irritate me very much.
ingly (grown folks also run low on my heart was weak, ,and after the
pep, once in a while) they can receive eeightest exertion. it would start to
in proportion end be taught to flutter!
Pay • .
share the burden of buying their ,
needs. Thus the, family makes and 4. FrienttAdvlsecl Dile To Take
50-
,
• "12'
1.1t0ANS-
zoo
that clog out of here just as fast as
you 'can !"
Warren paused to say reproachful-
ly, "Gee! Mother! I thought I was
beiriging you something niee, and' see
how you •treat me."
Then he put the dog out. He also
grabbed the bundles he had put in his
mother's lap and emptied the pieces of
and they will find that their household
dutiee ewill become a pleasure instead
of oeLburden.
• jeea Richard, Edraunds ton, N.B.,
wrieizs:----‘ 'For five years was troubled
with my kidneys and they were so bad,
at tirnes, coeld not walk across the
• flooi• for the peens in my 'back.
Finally a friend advieed me to use
• Doan 's Kedney Pills, so I boeght six
boxes, and, now, have been relieved Of
my trouble foe over four years.
I will highly recommend 'Doan's' to
all those who suffer from any form o/
kidriee trouble,''
Doan's Kidney Pills aro pelt iip only
by The T, Milburn, Co. Linifted.
napkins.
When the party stopped once more
not a pretty thing to see, so ,dietprted
it was with -resentment and rage.
Again his mother spoke still
spends. together, and if the workers
cath the right spirit, a happy condi-
tion results, .
A home should be attractive, and
while it is primarily the mother's
duty t� make it so, each member of
the family -should help to keep it so.
Although well kept, it should be, liv-
at the cable. •Warren rushed in, and angellY) "Warren Farnsworthedid yeei able. Far better an oak table, filled
dumping the bundles in his mother's give all those nice things to that dee" with children's books, magazines, pa-
pers awl other well-chosen reading
lap lee cried "See Mother evhat Warren went and huddled himself
brotight you!".
In his great joy at giving Mother'a
preeent, he did not notice that he had
eft the screen door ajar and' that
Tecjdy, cagei• to see his little master,
had slipped in.
over on a log, his elbows on hie knees,
and .sobbed, not with repentance but
with hurt feelings and anger. .
The spots on the porch could soon be
cleaned up, but what of the spots
Caused by the fires Of resentment?
material, than a maliog•any table, with
a fancy scarf and two volumes of un-
fathomable poetry.
KEEPING FAMILY MATTERS AT HOME..
In a real home -it may be ever se
hamble or ever" so well equipped the
PAilburn's
Heart and Nerve
Pills
so ,"1 got eix boxes and took them regu-
larly, • and Memo then I have not had tee
slightest eign �f any trouble with either
my heart or ziervea. and I will ahvays
recommend II. & Pills to all those
who are suffering :from any form •of
heart or nerve troable."
You ran procure Milburn's Heart and
Nerve from any druggist or atelier.
They ere put up only by The T. Mile
burn Co., Limited., Termite, Ont.
• excuse
at all.
Eczema, Salt Rheum
RELIEVED BY
Mrs. Thomas Renaud, Sturgeon Falls,
Ont., writes: -'--'Por sorne time 1 wee
greatly troubled with eczema 'bet after
taking three bottles of Burdook 'Blood
Bitters I,was eeeteinly surprised to find
that, I was entirely telieved of my trou-
ble.
That was six montlis ago, and 1 have
'hot had e ,sign of it since, ana 1 surely
Wish to that* you for thie wonder:fed
meeicine, and can strongly recommend
it to anyone minoring as 1 did."
Burdock Blood Bitters has been on
the market for the past 48 years, told
is mentifeetured only by 'rho T. Mit'
burn Co,, Limited,